LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Leave it to a program about twentysomethings adrift to bounce around the media ecosystem like a shiftless slacker. And so it was for "quarterlife," which stumbled from the Internet to broadcast TV to cable in the course of a week.
It probably wasnt quite the arc envisioned by the series creator, Marshall Herskovitz. The former "thirtysomething" executive producer has been hailed as a visionary for attempting to make a go of original programming on the Internet; getting NBC to sign on for a second window was just the cherry on top.
But the horrific ratings performance of "quarterlife" on NBC last week, compounded by ill-advised public remarks Herskovitz made expressing his regrets, stained what could have been a success story to remember. To add insult to injury, "quarterlife" has since been consigned to NBCs sister cable channel Bravo, which Herskovitz has deemed a better fit.
But the irony of the failure of "quarterlife" to make the transition from the Internet to broadcast is that it never should have been on the Internet or broadcast. This was and always has been a cable series.
"Quarterlife" isnt really all that different from another NBC series struggling for survival: "Friday Night Lights." In both cases, NBC has learned the hard way that a drama about young adults -- even, and especially, a quality drama that trades in nuance and subtlety -- is simply too narrow to appeal to the broad audience necessary to grab a decent broadcast rating.
The ugly truth of broadcast TV is that it is impossible to command a significant audience without something that can appeal to the latter half of the 25-54 demographic; they are the generation that still makes TV the foundation of their media consumption habits. So why would anyone well over 25 tune in to a drama about the trials and tribulations of being 25?
Demographically speaking, "quarterlife" is a better fit for the Internet, and yet it doesnt quite fit on that medium. The problem is tonal; there simply has never been a quality scripted drama that has worked online. The Internet seems more hospitable to comedy and unscripted formats.
Once Herskovitz got back the rights to "quarterlife" from ABC, which originally developed the series, he should have taken the program to a young-skewing cable network that has made scripted programming work before. An edgier version of the series, with amped-up language and sexuality, would have been a great fit for, say, Showtime, which doesnt have to cater to any particular demo.
But the funny thing is, "quarterlife" may still be on the wrong network. Bravo is the home to 100% unscripted programs that are all about superficial materialism from fashion ("Project Runway") to dating ("The Millionaire Matchmaker"). "Quarterlife" is a scripted drama about navel-gazing twentysomethings searching for their authentic selves. Scheduling "quarterlife" on Bravo is like filling a Humvee with ethanol fuel.
Heres a suggestion for NBC Universal: Why not put "quarterlife" on its newly acquired cable network, Oxygen? The network has the same young-female skew as the series, and the addition of "quarterlife" would have been just the injection of buzz-generating original programming that would have signaled that NBC Universal is angling to turn that network around.
Getting 3.1 million viewers is awful on NBC, but that kind of audience on Oxygen would have execs popping Champagne corks. Its difficult to understand why anyone involved in "quarterlife" didnt realize that from the very beginning.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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